Rapid transfer home in the last days of life

Please note: syringe driver and syringe pump are similar terms for the purpose of this document

Management

Follow five steps below to:

  • facilitate a peaceful death in the patient’s preferred place
  • facilitate seamless transfer from hospital or hospice to home within normal working hours. Prevent re-admission where possible.

 

Step 1 – Communication and anticipatory care planning

  • Holistic assessment – physical, including optimising symptom control, psychological, emotional and spiritual needs.
  • Significant conversations with patient, and relatives, friends and carers as appropriate, and clearly document within medical and nursing notes.
  • Communicate above conversations and decisions to appropriate teams, including social care.
  • Assess urgency of discharge and identify potential estimated discharge date.
  • Consider discussion with palliative care team, discharge team or both.
right arrow
Regularly review patient’s condition. Identify risks of discharge (including risk of death during transfer) and discuss with patient (if appropriate), relatives, friends or carers, primary healthcare team and social care.
down arrow

Step 2 - symptom control and 24-hour care needs

 

MEDICAL

  • Contact general practitioner (GP) and update them on clinical condition, 'Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation' (DNACPR) status and significant conversations.
  • Rationalise medications.
  • Identify continuing need for oxygen and nebulisers – arrange if required.
  • Prescribe anticipatory end of life medications minimum 7-day supply.
  • Send discharge script to pharmacy 24 hours prior to discharge if possible (refer to prescription guidance in further information section below).
  • Contact pharmacist/dispensary directly to highlight urgency and ensure discharge medication is available before discharge.
right arrow

NURSING

  • Liaise with community nurse (CN) about patient’s clinical condition, care needs of patient and carer, care package required and need for essential equipment.
  • Communicate significant conversations to CN.
    Consider care package from social work following discussion with CN.
  • Consider referral to community specialist palliative care team.
  • If patient is on Continuous Subcutaneous Infusion (CSCI), refer to symptom control guidance in further information section below.
right arrow

PHARMACY CONSIDERATIONS

  • Check all items are in stock.
  • Check appropriate formulation prescribed.
  • Ensure appropriate ‘as required’ and anticipatory end of life medications are prescribed with appropriate dose and route.
  • If patient is on CSCI: check appropriate doses, compatible combination and correct diluents prescribed.
  • Minimum 7-day supply – original packs where possible (refer to prescription guide in further information section below).
down arrow

Step 3 - Documentation

 

MEDICAL
  • Contact GP to request medicine administration documentation for community nursing staff is provided in patient’s home and that electronic key information summary (KIS) is updated.
  • DNACPR form completed as per policy (refer to further information for step 1 below and national DNACPR policy).
  • Complete immediate discharge letter/transfer plan.
  • If patient has an end of life care plan ensure it is comprehensively completed (refer to guidance below). 
left-right arrow
NURSING
  • Complete immediate discharge letter, transfer plan or both.
  • If possible photocopy CSCI prescription and monitoring chart for case notes and send  original home with patient.
  • If patient has an end of life care plan ensure it is comprehensively completed. If possible photocopy this. Send original documentation  home with patient, relative, friend or carer and keep copy in case notes.
  • Send original DNACPR form home with patient, relative, friend or carer (refer to further information for Step 1 below and national DNACPR policy).
down arrow

Step 4 - Transport

 

NURSING
  • Request ambulance for patient going home to die as soon as estimated discharge date is agreed.
  • Refer any transport issues to local discharge team and/or ambulance service for speedy resolution.
  • Provide ambulance service with an update of patient's condition, DNACPR status, mode of transfer such as chair or trolley, if oxygen is required and if patient has a syringe pump in situ
  • Provide patient’s weight if required, be aware of access or stairs into patient’s home.
  • Inform relatives, friends or carers if patient being transferred on trolley that there is a possibility that they will be transferred to a chair to get into the home
  • Do relatives, friends or carers wish to escort the patient? If so, discuss appropriateness of escort with Scottish Ambulance Service.
down arrow

Step 5 – Immediately prior to transfer home

 

MEDICAL AND NURSING
  • Regularly review patient’s condition. If patient deteriorates further, review discharge plan. Reassess risks of discharge (including risk of death during transfer) and discuss with patient (if appropriate), relatives, friends or carers and primary healthcare team.
  • Contact GP/CN re estimated time of arrival home (if appropriate).
  • If patient to be discharged out of hours (OOH), contact OOH GP service and CN.
  • If discharge cancelled contact relevant teams.
right arrow
PHARMACY
  • If unable to dispense full quantities of discharge medication – liaise with nursing staff and consider partial supply of prescription to avoid delaying ambulance.
  • Request GP/CN is informed if unable to dispense all discharge medication.

 

Further information for Step 1: communication and anticipatory care planning


Significant conversations:

  • Conversations should be carried out as sensitively as possible with the patient and their relative, friend or carer as appropriate.
  • Topics should include: patient’s current condition, estimated prognosis, plan for symptom control, 24-hour care needs, level of support available, any identifiable potential problems including risk of a significant event where present (refer to emergencies guideline) and DNACPR decision (refer to DNACPR section below).
  • Contact numbers for OOH advice and support should be provided to the relative, friend or carer.
  • Discussions with the patient (where appropriate) and relative, friend or carer may be necessary about preferred place of care and the agreement of a plan if home is not appropriate. This may include discussion of hospice/community hospital/hospital admission if this is what the patient would like and if a bed is available there.


DNACPR:

  • The patient, relatives, friends and carers should be aware that DNACPR decision is a clinical decision because CPR is unlikely to be successful. 
  • The patient, relatives, friends and carers should not be burdened with feeling they are being asked to make a resuscitation decision, but should be encouraged to discuss any issues or concerns that they may have.
  • It may be judged to be harmful to have an explicit conversation about the DNACPR form with a patient who is clearly in their very final days of life.  Gently seeking their permission to discuss “important issues about their care at home” with family members allows the DNACPR conversation to happen with the family without causing distress to the patient.
  • The patient, relatives, friends and carers should be informed that the DNACPR form will go home with them to enable the patient to die without unwanted interventions.
  • The GP/OOH service must be aware of the decision to ensure emergency services are not called inappropriately where the patient’s death is expected.
  • In the unusual circumstance that the decision has been made not to send the DNACPR form home with the patient, the ward doctor should speak to the GP and the nurse to the ambulance crew to communicate the clinical decision and the reason why the patient has not been informed.
  • Following a recent legal judgement the only acceptable justification for having a clinical DNACPR decision in place without informing the patient is where it is clear that informing them would cause physical or psychological harm and the importance of documenting this in the clinical notes cannot be overemphasised.
  • If further guidance is required, please refer to the national DNACPR policy.

 

Further information for Step 2: symptom control and 24 hour care needs

Nursing

  • CSCI via ambulatory syringe pump (also termed syringe driver)
  • Refill syringe pump just prior to patient discharge – notify CN of the time pump was changed.
  • Record date of giving set/line change on discharge/transfer plan documentation/syringe pump documentation.
  • Ensure syringe pump is correctly labelled.
  • Confirm arrangements for return of syringe pump to ward.
  • Ensure there is a ward record of patient name, community health index (CHI) number, CN contact, syringe pump serial number and discharge date to facilitate return of pump.


Medical

  • Medical staff should inform GP if anticipatory medication will be provided with discharge medication.
  • Medical staff should contact GP to ensure ‘Direction to Administer’/medicine administration documentation is available at patient’s home.
  • If patient is already stable on an opioid and pain is controlled, prescribe current dose and route.
  • If oral route still in use, ensure parenteral opioid medication is also prescribed on discharge prescription.
  • Consider prescribing medication to control the following symptoms (it is good practice to specify dose, frequency and indication):

For guidance on anticipatory symptom management, refer to Last days of life guideline.

 

Medication

Example prescription templates may assist junior medical staff in completing discharge prescriptions timeously (refer to examples below although different doses may be required depending on previous prescription/use). For opioids and midazolam, controlled drug prescription requirements apply: the formulation and strength of preparation desired must be stated and dose and frequency are also required. The total amount of drug to be supplied must be specified in both words and figures.

It is also important to remember to prescribe adequate diluent, for example 10 ampoules of 10ml water for injection.

 

Tables are best viewed in landscape mode on mobile devices

Pain/breathlessness

Anxiety/agitation

Morphine sulfate 10mg/ml injection
2mg subcutaneous (SC) up to 1 hourly as required for
pain or breathlessness (max 3 times in 4 hours, max 6 times in 24 hours)
Supply 10 (ten) ampoules

………Example prescription only……

Midazolam 10mg/2ml injection
2mg SC 1 hourly as required for anxiety
or agitation (max 6 times in 24 hours)
Supply 10 (ten) ampoules

……Example prescription only ……

Thin, upper respiratory secretions

Nausea/vomiting

Hyoscine butylbromide 20mg /1ml injection
20mg SC  up to 1 hourly as required for
thin, upper respiratory secretions (max 3 times in 4 hours, max 6 times in 24 hours)
Supply 10 ampoules

……Example prescription only ………

Levomepromazine 25mg/1ml injection
2.5mg to 5mg SC 12 hourly as required for nausea
Supply 10 ampoules

………Example prescription only…………

 

References

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde 2017. Rapid Discharge Guidance for Patients who are in the Last Days of Life [Online]. Available: http://www.palliativecareggc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Rapid_Discharge_Algorithm_030317.pdf [Accessed 2018 Oct 11].

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde 2017. What Happens when someone is Dying? Information for Relatives or Friends [Online]. Available: http://www.nhsggc.org.uk/media/237119/nhsggc_ph_what_can_happen_when_someone_is_dying_2016-04.pdf [Accessed 2018 Oct 11].

Scottish Government. 2010. Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR): Integrated Adult Policy: Decision Making and Communication [Online]. Available: http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2010/05/24095633/11 [Accessed 2018 Oct 11].